Let's Get Technical > Troubleshooting Problems
Viper trouble
Dante:
Viper troubleshooting topic split and moved.
Hey Stanski,
My Classic did the same thing you described. I was using the Brown channel, with a heavy overdrive (not quite distortion) tone, and it got louder as it warmed up. Thing is, later on, it went back down and came back up again. Just a couple dBs of difference, but the drive also fluctuated (cleaning up when the tone went down).
It has done this before, but I thought I remedied it by replacing the toobs with the original (very old) toobs. I wonder if it's a tube thing or if the Viper and Classic share some sort of circuitry that causes this :dunno:
Maybe try a different set of tubes?
Harley Hexxe:
Hey Dante,
I'm pretty sure Kim would have already tried the tube rolling in that Viper, as that would have been the easiest fix. I also believe the Classic tone would live in that amp to a degree since that was the current MP-1 preamp that was on the market at the time the Viper came out, and the original had already been discontinued for 3 years.
Harley 8)
Kim:
--- Quote from: Harley Hexxe on October 17, 2016, 03:26:44 PM ---I'm pretty sure Kim would have already tried the tube rolling in that Viper, as that would have been the easiest fix.
--- End quote ---
Yep, that was the very first thing I did when it went out. At that time a had about a dozen known good tubes to try, with no change to the Viper's operation. I didn't see anything else obviously wrong in there either. :dunno:
Dante might even recall, that him and I were actually talking on the phone while I was playing the Viper when suddenly right in the middle of a riff the sound dropped to near-nothing.
Aside from trying different tubes, I simply have not found the time (or patience) to sit and try to figure out what's wrong. I contacted Matt T. a few times to see if he could go through it, but he always seemed to be swamped with other things.
Harley Hexxe:
You know, from that description when you were on the phone with Dante, I would say that is a capacitor that is not completely dead, but getting there. It could be a poor connection at that cap, but I've seen a few weak ones act just like that in other amps.
MarshallJMP:
Could be a cap but it could also be the buffer fet after the tubesection. Or some in the either switching logic or the audio switch circuit.
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